| Literature DB >> 21340693 |
Linda M Reis1, Rebecca C Tyler, Kala F Schilter, Omar Abdul-Rahman, Jeffrey W Innis, Beth A Kozel, Adele S Schneider, Tanya M Bardakjian, Edward J Lose, Donna M Martin, Ulrich Broeckel, Elena V Semina.
Abstract
BMP4 loss-of-function mutations and deletions have been shown to be associated with ocular, digital, and brain anomalies, but due to the paucity of these reports, the full phenotypic spectrum of human BMP4 mutations is not clear. We screened 133 patients with a variety of ocular disorders for BMP4 coding region mutations or genomic deletions. BMP4 deletions were detected in two patients: a patient affected with SHORT syndrome and a patient with anterior segment anomalies along with craniofacial dysmorphism and cognitive impairment. In addition to this, three intragenic BMP4 mutations were identified. A patient with anophthalmia, microphthalmia with sclerocornea, right-sided diaphragmatic hernia, and hydrocephalus was found to have a c.592C >T (p.R198X) nonsense mutation in BMP4. A frameshift mutation, c.171dupC (p.E58RfsX17), was identified in two half-siblings with anophthalmia/microphthalmia, discordant developmental delay/postaxial polydactyly, and poor growth as well as their unaffected mother; one affected sibling carried an additional BMP4 mutation in the second allele, c.362A > G (p.H121R). This is the first report indicating a role for BMP4 in SHORT syndrome, Axenfeld-Rieger malformation, growth delay, macrocephaly, and diaphragmatic hernia. These results significantly expand the number of reported loss-of-function mutations, further support the critical role of BMP4 in ocular development, and provide additional evidence of variable expression/non-penetrance of BMP4 mutations.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21340693 PMCID: PMC3178759 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-011-0968-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132
Fig. 1Patient 1 with SHORT syndrome demonstrating short stature, macrocephaly, decreased subcutaneous fat in upper trunk and head, prominent forehead, sunken eyes, small chin, and hypoplastic nares (a) along with Rieger anomaly, congenital glaucoma, and microcornea (b, c). Patient 2 with bilateral microphthalmia, maxillary hypoplasia with midface flattening, thin upper lip, broad nasal bridge and tip, and telecanthus (d). Patient 3 with right anophthalmia/severe microphthalmia, left mild microphthalmia with sclerocornea, facial asymmetry macrocephaly (e). Patient 4 with bilateral clinical anophthalmia (f) and Patient 5 with left anophthalmia (prosthesis in place) (g)
Summary of BMP4 loss-of-function mutations and patient features
|
| Eye | Digit | Brain/neuro | Craniofacial | Growth | Other | Family history | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deletionsb | ||||||||
| Patient 1, this study | 2,263-kb deletion (+ 13 genes) | Rieger anomaly, congenital glaucoma microcornea, nystagmus | Hands/feet appear small | Mild gross motor delay with hypotonia; normal brain structures | Macrocephaly, prominent forehead, sunken eyes, small chin, hypoplastic nares | Height and weight ≤3rd centile | SHORT syndrome; hyperextensible joints, teething delay, lipodystrophy, umbilical anomaly | Parents unaffected; mother does not carry deletion; father not tested |
| Patient 2, this study | 158-kb deletion (BMP4 only) | Microphthalmia, persistence of pupillary membrane, high myopia, strabismus, nystagmus, corectopia (right) | WNL | Mild–moderate cognitive impairment, hypotonia; no imaging studies | Maxillary hypoplasia, midface flattening, thin upper lip, broad nasal bridge and tip, telecanthus, preauricular ear tag | WNL | None | Not available |
| Hayashi et al. ( | 2,700-kb deletion (+ 17 genes) | Congenital glaucoma, sclerocornea | Bilateral postaxial polydactyly (feet) | Global delay; Decreased brain white matter, lateral ventricular dilatation | Micrognathia | Weight <3rd centile | None | De novo deletion |
| Intragenic mutations | ||||||||
| Patient 3, this study | c.592C>T (p.R198X) | Anophthalmia; microphthalmia with sclerocornea | WNL | Development normal; hydrocephalus, diffuse cerebral atrophy | Facial asymmetry, macrocephaly, large anterior fontanelle | Height >97th centile | Right sided diaphragmatic hernia, laryngomalacia, inguinal hernia | De novo mutation |
| Patient 4, this study | c.171dupC (p.E58RX17) | Anophthalmia | WNL | Development normal; Normal brain structures | Small ears | Height <3rd centile | Small renal cyst (left) | Affected half-sister (Patient 5) and unaffected mother carry the mutation |
| Patient 5, this study | c.171dupC (p.E58RX17); c.362A>G (p.H121R) in trans | Anophthalmia (left), blepharophimosis | Bilateral postaxial polydactyly (hands) | Development normal; normal brain structures | Telecanthus, relative macrocephaly (75th centile), frontal bossing | Height and weight <3rd centile | None | Above; Father not available |
| Bakrania et al. ( | c.226delAG (p.S76CfsX29) | Anophthalmia; Microanterior segment, iris and chorioretinal coloboma, retinal dystrophy | Bilateral postaxial polydactyly (feet) | Learning difficulties; hypoplastic corpus callosum, enlarged trigones, sulcal widening | WNL | Not reported | None | Mutation seen in mother, grandmother, and great aunt with polydactyly and/or high myopia |
| Suzuki et al. ( | c.592C>T (p.R198X) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Cleft lip and palate | Not reported | Not reported | Parents not tested |
| Lubbe et al. ( | c.856C>T (p.R286X) | None | None | None | None | Not reported | Colorectal cancer diagnosed at 42 years | Parents not tested; no first degree relative with colorectal cancer |
aNucleotide numbering is relative to reference sequence NM_001202.3 where +1 is the A of the ATG initiation codon
bPatients with deletion of OTX2 in addition to BMP4 were excluded as OTX2 is a well-established cause of ocular and pituitary defects; therefore, the contribution of BMP4 to the phenotype could not be determined
Fig. 2Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0 microarray analysis (a) and TaqMan assay data (b) for Patients 1 and 2. Heterozygous BMP4 deletions (arrows in a and b) were detected. The UCSC Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu) view of the deleted region indicating positions of genes is shown with rectangular bars indicating the extent of the deletion in each patient
Fig. 3a Intragenic BMP4 mutations and affected pedigrees; mutation sites indicated with arrows. b Multiple sequence alignment of BMP4 amino acid sequences demonstrating conservation of the histidine affected in the identified H121R mutation. Shaded areas indicate conserved amino acids. GenBank accession numbers are as follows: Homo sapiens NP_570911.2, Mus musculus AAH34053, Danio rerio AAH78423, Gallus gallus NP_990568